Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law interpretations. Both interpretations tend to take up the question of obligation from the perspective of teaching those who contend for too great Liberty how to obey. But Hobbes also has a second audience, and a second goal in mind: those who contend for too much Authority must be taught how to govern. From that perspective, a different discussion of obligation emerges. What is revealed is a contiguous set of reflections in Leviathan that pivot on the character of the sovereign and the citizens' judgment thereof, all of which inform effective obligation and have little in common with received interpretations of obligation. It further reveals a relation...
The workshop aims at exploring different ways of approaching Hobbesian thought – far from the standa...
Thomas Hobbes is notable as a philosopher not least for having grounded his political thought on his...
Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding o...
Abstract Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law i...
Scholars debate whether Hobbes held to a command theory of law or to a natural law theory, and to wh...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmon...
From the early period of intellectual discourse, philosophers and political writers have always thou...
According to the usual interpretation, Hobbes argues that subjects have binding political obligation...
Thomas Hobbes’ theory of punishment plays a constitutive role in the Leviathan’s theory of state sov...
Thomas Hobbes first law of nature states that 'each rational man shall and ought to endeavor peace'....
This paper explores an internal relation between wrong-doing and the ability to think in moral terms...
A central argument of the Leviathan has to do with the political importance of education. Hobbes wan...
This article considers Hobbes’ contribution to the development of constitutionalist thought by conte...
The workshop aims at exploring different ways of approaching Hobbesian thought – far from the standa...
Thomas Hobbes is notable as a philosopher not least for having grounded his political thought on his...
Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding o...
Abstract Debates regarding obligation in Hobbes have turned on either natural right or natural law i...
Scholars debate whether Hobbes held to a command theory of law or to a natural law theory, and to wh...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
This essay closely examines Hobbes’ underexplored discussion of legal theory in the Leviathan, and a...
Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmon...
From the early period of intellectual discourse, philosophers and political writers have always thou...
According to the usual interpretation, Hobbes argues that subjects have binding political obligation...
Thomas Hobbes’ theory of punishment plays a constitutive role in the Leviathan’s theory of state sov...
Thomas Hobbes first law of nature states that 'each rational man shall and ought to endeavor peace'....
This paper explores an internal relation between wrong-doing and the ability to think in moral terms...
A central argument of the Leviathan has to do with the political importance of education. Hobbes wan...
This article considers Hobbes’ contribution to the development of constitutionalist thought by conte...
The workshop aims at exploring different ways of approaching Hobbesian thought – far from the standa...
Thomas Hobbes is notable as a philosopher not least for having grounded his political thought on his...
Although Hobbes' understanding of the sovereign's position in a state and Descartes' understanding o...